AI can support research in the Humanities making it easier and more efficient. It is thus essential that AI practitioners and Humanities scholars take a Humanities-centred approach to the development, deployment and application of AI methods for the Humanities.
This entry includes the following presentations from the 2nd CHAI workshop.
Hagen Peukert: AI Approaches Overcome Variability Problems In Diachronic Text Analysis: The Case Of Identifying Bound Affixes in Middle English (download presentation 1)
Hussein Mohammed, Agnieszka Helman-Ważny: Understanding the Zhangzhung Nyengyu tsakali Collection using Computational Pattern Analysis (download presentation 2)
Jens Dörpinghaus: Social Network Analysis and Co-Occurrence: Identifying the Gaps
Simon Schiff, Magnus Bender, Ralf Möller: Embodiment of an Agent by a Pepper Robot for Explaining Retrieval Results (download presentation 4 and demo)
Haiyan Hu-von Hinüber, Sylvia Melzer: On the Awakening of the Buddhological Epigraphy and Philology from the AI (download presentation 5)
The submitted presentations are included in this upload for which permission to publish has been granted.
The KI2022 workshop – Humanities-Centred AI was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy - EXC 2176 'Understanding Written Artefacts: Material, Interaction and Transmission in Manuscript Cultures', project no. 390893796.